Recent historians have reappraised the legacy of Duval. James Sharpe in
Dick Turpin regarded Duval as the most significant figure in the shaping of the highwayman myth. John and Philip Sugden's
The Thief of Hearts reconstructs what is known of the historical Duval, using much fresh evidence, and shows that the traditions about the Frenchman were used by such literary luminaries as Samuel Butler (
A Pindarick Ode), John Gay (''The Beggar's Opera
) and William Harrison Ainsworth (Rookwood
and Talbot Harland'') to create the iconic image of the gentleman highwayman still beloved today. • "As he reached this spot, a man started from the obscurity, and requested with the politeness of a Claude Duval to know the time." From
Mountains and Molehills; or, Recollections of a Burnt Journal, 1855, by
Francis Samuel Marryat, (1826–1855). • A
comic opera called
Claude Duval was written in 1881 by
Edward Solomon and
Henry Pottinger Stephens and enjoyed success both in Britain and in America. • In Mary Hooper's book
The Remarkable Life and Times of Eliza Rose, Duval is said to be a friend of
Nell Gwyn and is credited with saving King
Charles II of England's life. • A public house in the town of
Camberley in Surrey is named in his honour. • From 1953 to 1959 the British comic
The Comet ran a popular strip about Duval, making him older than in reality so that he could be a Royalist officer during the Civil War and a Royalist agent during the Commonwealth and Protectorate.
Comet's "Claude Duval The Laughing Cavalier" was also published as a stand-alone Thriller Comics Library comic book in 1955. • The
Comet comic strip was sufficiently successful that in 1956 film director-producer
George King devised a television series called
The Gay Cavalier featuring Duval (played by French actor
Christian Marquand) and another character from the comic, the
Cromwellian intelligence officer Major Midas Mould (played by
Ivan Craig). The series was made by
Associated-Rediffusion and broadcast from May to August 1957. Despite having starred such actors as
Christopher Lee and
Nigel Stock, none of the 13 episodes appears to have survived. • A 2005
Travel Channel Haunted Hotels documentary on
hauntings claims that Claude Duval's ghost presently haunts the Holt Hotel, the tavern wherein he was arrested before being condemned to death. This same documentary also claims several people were murdered by Duval, despite scant evidence. • Michelle Lowe's novel, Cherished Thief, published in 2012, depicts Claude DuVal's entire life story. • In
Arthur Conan Doyle's short story
One Crowded Hour, a victim of a chivalrous highway robber rebukes the robber, saying, "Don't come the Claude Duval over us." • He was the subject of
London Dungeon exhibition in May 2015. • Is a subject in the podcast radio-play Adventures of Sage & Savant Episode 206 ==References==